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Concept
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Singing the Unsayable: Expression and Silence

Mirabai's poetry attempts to express the inexpressible love of devotion; this teaching illuminates the Brahmaviharas as lived experience that exceeds doctrine.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai knew that her longing for Krishna could never be fully spoken—language fails before true love. Yet she sang endlessly, using poetry to edge toward what cannot be said. This paradox—expressing the inexpressible—teaches a crucial lesson about Brahmaviharas practice: these four qualities cannot be mastered through intellectual understanding alone. They are lived, embodied experiences that exceed conceptual frameworks. Buddhist teachings offer maps, terminology, meditation techniques, but the actual experience of meeting someone with genuine metta, of holding their suffering in karuna, of celebrating their joy in mudita, of witnessing all of it in upekkha—these are beyond words. Mirabai's examined heart recognized this gap between doctrine and experience. In relationships, this means understanding that Brahmaviharas practice is expressed through presence, gesture, tone, action—the thousand small ways we show up for others that cannot be reduced to technique. The singing continues because the heart has more to say than words can carry. Teaching Brahmaviharas to others therefore requires both precise language and the humility to point beyond language to direct experience.

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